Circles of Care

Author:

Hanson Laura C.1,Armstrong Tonya D.2,Green Melissa A.1,Hayes Michelle1,Peacock Stacie3,Elliot-Bynum Sharon4,Goldmon Moses V.5,Corbie-Smith Giselle1,Earp Jo Anne1

Affiliation:

1. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA

2. Armstrong Center for Hope, Durham, NC, USA

3. Project Compassion, Durham, NC, USA

4. Community Health Coalition and Healing with CAARE, Inc., Durham, NC, USA

5. Shaw University, Raleigh, NC, USA

Abstract

Peer support interventions extend care and health information to underserved populations yet rarely address serious illness. Investigators from a well-defined academic–community partnership developed and evaluated a peer support intervention for African Americans facing advanced cancer. Evaluation methods used the Reach, Efficacy, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework. Investigators initially recruited and trained 24 lay health advisors who shared information or support with 210 individuals. However, lay advisors reported barriers of medical privacy and lack of confidence working alone with people with cancer. Training was modified to match the support team model for peer support; training reached 193 volunteers, 104 of whom formed support teams for 47 persons with serious illness. Support teams were adopted by 23 community organizations, including 11 African American churches. Volunteers in teams felt prepared to implement many aspects of supportive care such as practical support (32%) or help with cancer or palliative care resources (43%). People with serious illness requested help with practical, emotional, spiritual, and quality of life needs; however, they rarely wanted advocacy (3%) or cancer or palliative care resources (5%) from support teams. Volunteers had difficulty limiting outreach to people with advanced cancer due to medical privacy concerns and awareness that others could benefit. Support teams are a promising model of peer support for African Americans facing advanced cancer and serious illness, with reach, adoption, and implementation superior to the lay advisor model. This formative initial evaluation provides evidence for feasibility and acceptance. Further research should examine the efficacy and potential for maintenance of this intervention.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)

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